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Applications of stable isotopes in paleosols
- PaleoCO2 concentrations (dC13)
- Paleoecology (dC13)
- Paleoclimate (dO18)
- Paleoelevation (dO18)
- Paleotemperature and aridity (clumped delta47 and O17)
What material in soils do we analyze for their stable isotopic composition?
- soil organic matter
- authigenic minerals (minerals that form in soils under environmental conditions - soil carbonate, clay mienrals, siderite)
Father of Isotope Chemistry
Harold Urey
Father of Mass Spectrometry
Alfred Nier
Isotope
atoms with the same number of protons but different number of neutrons, giving them a different atomic mass
Stable isotope
an isotope that is stable and will not decay
Isotopologue
isotopically substituted molecule (ex. C(12)O2, C(13)O2, C(14)O2)
light environmental stable isotopes
large mass difference of light stable isotopes influences their velocity, and therefore their rates of physical and chemical reactions and diffusion
heavy stable isotopes
- mass difference between heavy isotopes is small (<2%)
- all isotopes behave similarly during physical and chemical reactions (important as tracers and for radiometric dating)
characteristics of stable light isotopes
- elements have relatively low atomic mass (atomic number <20)
- large relative mass difference between the rare (heavy) and abundant (light) isotope
- element form chemical bonds that have a high degree of covalent bonds
- elements generally exist in more than one oxidation state and form a wide range of compounds
- abundance of element and rare isotope are sufficiently high (a few tenths of a percent) to ensure precise analysis on a mass spectrometer
main applications of light stable isotope geochemistry
- thermometry
- tracers
- reaction mechanics
- paleoclimatology
fractionation
the partitioning of molecules with different masses due to a disparity in their relative reaction rates
fractionation types
1) physiochemical (equilibrium and non-equilibrium/kinetic process)
2) diffusive (non-equilibirum/kinetic process)
physiochemical fractionation
- phase change or chemical reaction
- basis of physiochemical fractionation is the difference in the strength of bonds formed by light and heavier isotopes of a given element
- greater dissociation energy is needed for heavier isotopes, which have stronger bonds; lighter nuclei react more quickly
diffusive fractionation
- diffusion of atoms across a concentration gradient
- fractionation arises from differences in the diffusive velocities between isotopes (ie lighter isotopes diffuse faster)
- possible to establish a steady state diffusion regim, but NOT an equilibrium (rate of forward reactions cannot = backward reactions)
- diffusion is a kinetic fractionation
temperature effect on fractionation
- greater fractionation at low temperatures
kinetic (non-equilibrium) fractionation
- occurs when thermodynamic equilbrium does not exist, usually as a result of fast, incomplete, or unidirectional processes (evaporation, diffusion, dissociation reactions, biologic reactions)
- effects will vary depending on reaction pathway, but typically enhance fractionation
stable isotope notation
d - difference of a sample relative to a standard (not a ratio)
reference standards
- VSMOW (Vienna - Standard Mean Oceanic Water)
- VPDB (Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite)
VSMOW
- used for all dO18 and dD analyses of water
- sometimes used for dO18 of calcite (only when comparing records with water or ice data)
VPDB
- calcite precipitated from ocean water
- used for most dO18 analyses of calcite and all dC13 analyses
- generally water is not converted to PDB scale for comparison
fractionation factors
a
- refers to the amount of fractionation (separation based on mass differences) that occurs during a specific physiochemical reaction at a given temperature
fractionation factor a>1
heavier isotopes incorporated in product
fractionation factor a<1
heavier isotopes retained in reactant
equilibrium isotope fractionation
- eq fractionation between two phases generally decreases with increasing temperature
- degree of fractionation is generally larger for elements whose mass difference is large
- heavy isotope is preferentially partitioned into site with stiffest bonds (strong and short)
- bond stiffness increases qualitatively with: high oxidation state, lighter elements, covalent bonds, a low coordination number
controls on dC13 values of soil carbonates
- Fractionation of atmospheric CO2 by vegetation type (grasslands - more positive, trees/shrubs - more negative)
- respiration rates - mixing of atmospheric CO2
- atmospheric pCO2 and dC13
- temperature
stable isotopic composition of soil carbonate
- C13 is preferentially incorporated into calcite during precipitation
fractionation of atmospheric CO2 by vegetation
- kinetic diffusion in soils
- C12 atoms have higher kinetic energy and diffuse faster than C13 atoms
- C(12)O2 molecules diffuse faster in a soil environment
- causes enrichment of about 4.4 per mil between soil respired CO2 and soil CO2
dC13 of C3 vegetation
-27.1 per mil
dC13 of C4 vegetation
-12.1 per mil
dominant C3 vegetation zones
- polar deserts, tundra, conifer forests, tropical/temperate broad-leafed forests
mixed C3/C4 vegetation zones
tropical temperate deserts, semi-desert
dominantly C4
need water stressed environment during growing season --> tropical temperate grasslands
- not all deserts have C4 (Mojave and Mediterranean)
soil carbonate values
C3: -12 to -10 per mil
C4: 0 to 2 per mil
soil respiration
release of CO2 from soil surface into atmosphere, caused by decomposition of organic matter, plant root respiration, and soil fauna respiration
respiration rates effect
- high soil respiration = more negative value
- low soil respiration = more positive value
atmospheric CO2 concentration effect
- low CO2 = more negative value
- high CO2 = more positive value
problems with soil carbonate in paleosols
- identifying soil carbonate
- diagenetic alteration of dC13 values
- estimating dC13 of atmosphere
- assumptions of soil respiration rates and temperature
controls on the dO18 of soil authigenic minerals
- dO18 of precipitation
- evaporitive enrichment of soil water
- temperature
- diagenetic alteration
stable isotopes and the hydrologic cycle
- lighter molecules evaporate more easily and diffuse to the surface faster than heavier molecules
- heavier molecules will precipitate more readily
dO18 of meteoric water: source
- dO18 of water body (ocean or lakes)
- temperature and humidity during evaporation
dO18 of meteoric water: sink
- dO18 of air mass evolves (becomes more negative) as it moves away from source
- temperature and humidity (seasonality)
- rayleigh distillation of air mass (continental effect, altitude effect, amount effect, seasonality, temperature)
rayleigh distillation
- isotopic composition of a reservoir changes as material is progressively removed in a fractionating process
- heavier isotope is preferentially entering liquid phase and progressively removed from clouds
altitude effect
- dO18 value of precipitation gets more negative with elevation
- function of rayleigh distillation and cooling of air mass
- avg lapse rate of -3 per mil/km
amount effect
- dO18 value of precip becomes more negative during higher rainfall intensity
- rayleigh distillation, change of water vapor isotopic value below clouds, no evaporative enrichment of rain droplets (rainfall can be modified during precip)
- cause of seasonal variation over island stations
continental effect
- isotopic values of precip become more negative toward the interior of a continent
- mostly same processes as altitude effect (rayleigh distillation and temperature)
seasonality
- large differences in seasonal temperature at mid-latitudes influence rayleigh distillation
- different source regions of moisture
- differences in evapotranspiration flux over continents
atmospheric temperature
- warmer temperatures = more positive dO18 of precip
- cooler temperatures = more negative dO18 of precip
evaporative enrichment
- dO18 of soil carbonate is more positive in more arid environments
- more evaporation of lighter isotopes = more positive values
soil temperature
i lowkey do not know
biggest assumption when using oxygen isotopes to infer past climatic or environmental change
assuming that precipitation doesn't change
why not use conventional dO18 paleothermometry?
- requires isotopic composition of water from which the carbonate grew (temp. estimates only as accurate as assumptions of isotopic comps. of past waters)
- diagenesis: carbonate minerals commonly undergo post-depositional transformations
isotope rules
- lighter molecules vibrate faster
- lighter molecules form weaker bonds
- isotope effects are stronger for bigger relative mass differences
- isotope effects are stronger at lower temperatures
clumped isotopes - isotopologues
- molecules that are identical except for their isotopic composition
- clumped isotopologues have multiple heavy isotope substitutions
- clumped arrangements are energetically favored, with more clumping at lower temps
clumped isotopes
isotopologues that include multiple rare, heavy isotopes
ex. C(13)O(18)O(16)
where C13 and O18 are the rare, heavy isotopes
challenges with clumped isotopes
- sample preparation (need large samples, slow, low abundance of target isotopologues, need to not scramble isotopologues)
- instrumentation (need high resolving power, need high resolution to measure small isotopic signals, need high abundance sensitivity)
- need at least 3 replicate samples to reduce uncertainty
clumped isotope applications
- paleotemperature estimates where source isotopic composition is unknown
- stability of ocean dO18 through time
- paleoelevation
- body temperature of extinct animals
- not for speleothems or fast-growing corals, mollusks unsure
clumped isotopes in formations
- marine carbonates: mostly form at equilibrium temperatures
- lake carbonates and soils: form at equilibrium temperatures but strongly biased to summer months
- freshwater shell: idk
- speleothems and travertines: do not form at equilibrium temperatures due to kinetic effects
diagenesis of clumped isotopes
- clumped isotopes are thermally reset below 2-3km (100-125C) burial
- if widespread, limits techniques to young, shallowly buried stratigraphic sections
dO18 of meteoric water can track
- moisture source
- how much it rains (amount effect)
- height of ancient mountains
- does NOT take into account evaporation
when we have dO18 of soil carbonate and want dO18 of meteoric water, we assume:
1) growth temperature
2) evaporation
triple oxygen isotopes
- tool to detect evaporation in waters and carbonates
- ambiguities in dO18 can be constrained with deltaO17
- can constrain hydrologic processes in geologic time
humidity related to deltaO17
- humid environments will be more positive per meg (ex. Huron River, MI is +15 per meg)
- arid environments will be more negative per meg (ex. Great Salt Lake, UT is -12 per meg)
O17 will be most useful in identifying:
1) when variation in dO18 of soil carbonate is due to increased evaporation
2) when variation in dO18 of soil carbonate is due to a difference in recharge dO18
kinetic diffusion of soil carbonate
add 4.4 per mil to account for kinetic diffusion of carbon isotopes in soil carbonate
temperature lapse rates for dC13 and dO18
dC13: 0.1 per mil/1C
dO18: 0.22 per mil/1C
what creates high isotopic values for soil carbonate?
- low soil respiration rates
- much colder values
- arid environments --> lighter isotopes evaporate faster
- shallow carbonate formation